Fans of the 109-year-old Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup (in its 107th edition) live by its magic moments. And the Round of 16 of this 2022 competition tossed up a good few of those on May 25. Join usopencup.com for a look back at eight moments of note from eight games in which 16 teams were evenly split between jubilation and despair. While Louisville City’s run came to an end, those curious third-division owls of Union Omaha are flying high and starting to terrify. So are USL Championship sluggers Sacramento Republic – after a thrilling round that saw worlds collide in LA and New York’s finest get good marks back at school.
What’s With These Owls?
Culture, both modern and of the ancients, made a scholar of Brother Owl. But he’s still a hunter at his core. It’s this side of the creature – ancient symbol of wisdom and the pre-human form for the great goddess Athena – that Union Omaha have tapped into. There are fresh pieces of, not one – but two, eviscerated Major League Soccer teams stuck in the Owls’ talons. The 2019 Open Cup runners-up Minnesota United fell in the Round of 16 same as the Chicago Fire did earlier. A stunning volley from Joe Brito in St. Paul finished off an epic comeback that now sees the Nebraska side still alive among the Last Eight teams (of an original 103). It sounded like your standard veteran patter when their captain Conor Doyle – who won an Open Cup with D.C. United in 2013 – said: “We have nothing to lose, and can play loose.” His gleaming eyes, which have seen all the good, the bad and the ugly of a journeyman’s career, told something more. Of a team, hungry for respect, carrying the flag for every dreamer out there.
Up next, it’s a trip to Sporting Kansas City. And we do recommend the four-time Open Cup champions load their big guns – and keep their eyes on the skies.
Don’t Forget Old LA
Los Angeles, you City of Angels. Home to our national Dream Machine, airbrusher of our rougher American edges. Carson, down in the county, is 25 miles from the Hollywood sign, but it was the site of pure Open Cup drama on Wednesday. Both the Galaxy and LAFC’s top dogs were on from the start. Chicharito went the distance for the home side, though, as Carlos Vela, blunted by injury, lasted only a few minutes. The flash of the moment – huge-money stars, heaving crowds and soccer-specific stadia – found counterpoint in the stands. There Benny Binshtock, Moshe Hoftman, Chon Miranda, Leo Kulinczenko and Avram Cohen watched on and considered how far the American game has come since they won five Open Cups between 1972 and 1981 with Maccabee LA. They were honored at the half, down on the field, and they must have felt a pang of familiarity when a brawl ended the 3-1 Galaxy win. That passion drew a straight line back to the rough and tumble of the old semi-pro days when the Maccabees, founded by Holocaust survivors and proudly wearing the Star of David on their chests, were, for a decade and then some, the best of the best. “What a day,” proclaimed Binshtock, a winner of five national titles who retired at the final whistle of his fifth Open Cup win (at Giants Stadium in 1981).
Grinwis, Stajduhar & the Gift of Orlando’s Goalkeepers
There’s something about Orlando City’s net-minders. They produce a kind of quiet Cup magic. In 2019, it was the red-headed and ever-smiling
Adam Grinwis who was the hero of that year’s Quarterfinal. The entire home end of Exploria Stadium sprinted through the stands and the concourses to the other end of the stadium to make sure they did their part after the pre-shootout coin toss didn’t cooperate. And the man they call Grinny, who, in 2012, helped amateur giant-slayers the Michigan Bucks (now the Flint City Bucks) beat MLS’ Chicago Fire in the Cup, was on the bench this week when his dear friend Mason Stajduhar saved a crucial shootout spot-kick in front of some of those same home fans from three years ago. It was only about ten days after Grinny and his wife, Morgan, played their part in an elaborate scheme that saw Stajduhar, a survivor of bone cancer, propose marriage on the pitch to his girlfriend Tatiana. “He’s one of the best people you’ll ever meet – and a real mentor to me,” said Stajduhar of Grinwis, who, not surprisingly, shared a long embrace with his friend and fellow ‘keeper after he helped book a place in the Quarterfinals.